Putin peace terms slammed at Ukraine summit
The leaders of Italy and Germany have strongly rejected ceasefire terms laid out by Vladimir Putin to stop the war in Ukraine, as scores of countries gathered at a two-day summit in Switzerland to discuss ending the conflict.
Italy's Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni called the Russian president's plan "propaganda" which effectively suggested that Ukraine "must withdraw from Ukraine".
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz dismissed it as a "dictatorial peace".
A draft declaration issued at the summit reaffirms Ukraine's territorial integrity and unambiguously rejects any nuclear threat against the country.
On Friday, Mr Putin claimed he would agree to a ceasefire if Ukraine withdrew troops from four regions which Russia partially occupies and claims to have annexed.
Andriy Yermak, chief of staff to Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky, told the BBC at the Swiss summit that there would be "no compromise on independence, sovereignty or territorial integrity".
Mr Putin revealed his terms ahead of the two-day Summit on Peace in Ukraine which is aimed at discussing the basic principles for ending the war.
More than 90 countries and global institutions are attending the event. It is the biggest gathering for Ukraine since the full-scale invasion.
But Russia was not invited, and China - a key ally of Russia - is not attending, so expectations of significant progress at this stage are low.
Commenting on Mr Putin's proposal, Ms Meloni said: "It doesn't seem particularly effective to me as a negotiation proposal to tell Ukraine that it must withdraw from Ukraine."
Britain's Prime Minister Rishi Sunak accused the Russian president of "spinning a phoney narrative about his willingness to negotiate".
He added that countries helping Russia with weapon supplies "are on the wrong side of history".
tymofiy on June 16th, 2024 at 00:15 UTC »
Putin said that he would agree to a ceasefire and start negotiation if Ukraine cedes currently controlled by Ukraine Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Kramatork, Sloviansk - all the territories which Russia failed to take by force but declared annexed.
Yes, he does not say that ceding four regions would bring peace. That would only be a starting point for negotiations.
FilthyUsedThrowaway on June 16th, 2024 at 00:08 UTC »
”If you want peace, all you have to do is give me everything I want and leave the door open for future invasion after I recover from my massive battlefield losses”. — Putin
mfyxtplyx on June 15th, 2024 at 23:23 UTC »
"Give us what we want and we won't make any trouble until we're in a better position to do so."